One of the Nvidia Shield TV’s nerdier virtues is its ability to record free broadcast TV from an antenna and stream it to all your other devices. But setting this up isn’t exactly a breeze.

To turn your Shield into a whole-home DVR, you’ll need an HDHomeRun networked tuner, an antenna, a subscription to Plex Pass, and an ounce of patience as you put all the pieces together. As of this writing, you’ll also need to join a Plex beta program.

We'll help you through each step. When we're finished, you'll have a Plex DVR on your Nvidia Shield Android TV.

What you’ll need

Nvidia Shield ($199.99): Either the first- or second-generation model will do, as they both have the same hardware and ports. You can also opt for the Shield Pro ($299.99 at Amazon), which has 500GB of built-in storage, as an alternative to using an external hard drive.

Jared Newman

The second-generation Nvidia Shield TV.

USB hard drive: You’ll plug this into the Shield to store recordings, unless you have a Shield Pro. Ideally, the drive should have at least 500GB of storage and a USB 3.0 interface.

HDHomeRun tuner ($100 to $180): This tuner connects to your router over ethernet, and streams broadcast channels to the Shield. The HDHomeRun Connect ($105 at Amazon) requires more bandwidth for streaming, and more storage for recordings. The HDHomeRun Extend ($179 at Amazon) uses transcoding to reduce the size of streams and recordings. (Note: If your router isn’t in a location where your over-the-air antenna can get good reception, this solution won’t work for you.)

Jared Newman / IDG

The HDHomeRun tuner connects to an antenna via coaxial cable, and to your home network router over ethernet.

Over-the-air antenna: It can be indoor or outdoor, as long you can wire the coaxial cable to the HDHomeRun.

Setting it up

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1. Connect your over-the-air antenna to the HDHomeRun tuner, connect the HDHomeRun into your router, and connect the HDHomeRun to a power source. (To access HDHomeRun’s live TV apps, follow the instructions included with the tuner. This will require a PC or Mac to set up.)

2. Plug the USB hard drive into your Nvidia Shield, head to Settings > Storage & reset, and select General USB Drive. Select “Erase & format as device storage” and follow the on-screen instructions. Warning: This will delete anything that’s currently on the USB drive, and anything stored on the drive after formatting will not be available outside of the Shield. The Shield does not currently support writing Plex recordings to conventionally formatted hard drives or network-attached storage devices.

IDG / Jared Newman

3. Join the Plex Media Server beta by visiting this link in your web browser and then clicking the “become a tester” button.

4. Install Plex Media Server on your Shield through the Google Play Store. You can install to your Shield straight from the web by clicking “Install” and selecting “No carrier Nvidia SHIELD Android TV” from the list.

5. Open Plex on your Shield—it should be pre-installed—and follow the prompts for setting up Plex Media Server.

6. Visit Plex.tv and sign in through the account associated with your Plex Pass subscription. After signing in, click “Launch” in the upper right-hand corner.

7. Aim your cursor at the “Libraries” section in the left sidebar, and hit the “+” button. Select “TV Shows,” then hit “Next,” and select “Browse for Media Folder.”

IDG / Jared Newman

8. Select the folder on your USB drive (or on the Shield itself, for Shield Pro users) where you want TV recordings to be stored.

Jared Newman / IDG

7. Repeat steps 7 and 8, but for “Movies” instead of “TV Shows.”

8. Select “Settings” from the left sidebar, then select “DVR (Beta)”—the second option from the bottom—and click “DVR Setup.”

Jared Newman / IDG

9. Plex should detect the HDHomeRun automatically. Select “Continue.”

10. Make sure “Antenna” is the input source in the next menu, and then hit “Scan” to find local channels through the tuner. Select your country, language, and postal code on the next screen, and then hit “Continue.”

Jared Newman / IDG

11. On the program guide screen, select “Local Over the Air Broadcast” from the list, and then hit “Continue.” Plex will begin downloading guide data for your area.

Jared Newman / IDG

You’re done, though it may take some time to pull in channel listings. The main Plex menu should now display a “Program Guide” section, where you can browse and add recordings, and a “Recording Schedule” section where you can look for potential conflicts.

The best part of this setup is that you don’t have to use the Shield to access your recordings. Using the Plex app on your phone, tablet, PC, or TV device, you can stream those recordings from anywhere, including outside the home.

The only downside is that you need a separate app to watch live TV. The official HDHomeRun app is available on Android TV, Xbox, and Windows, while unofficial apps are available for other platforms, including Channels for Apple TV and iOS, and InstaTV for Amazon Fire TV.

Alternative OTA DVR options

The combination of Shield, HDHomeRun, and Plex isn’t your only option for over-the-air recordings. HDHomeRun owners can also use Plex Media Server on a PC, recording shows to an internal hard drive, external USB drive, or a NAS box.

Alternatively, the Tablo DVR ($220 for the two-tuner model, available at Amazon for $198.30 at time of publication) has a simpler setup process, supports whole-home viewing, and offers a single app on many platforms for live and recorded TV. A guide subscription costs $5 per month, $50 per year, or $150 for life, and you must supply your own antenna and hard drive.

If you want to go even simpler, TiVo’s Roamio OTA (with a 1TB hard drive, $369.99 at Amazon at the time of publication) and Channel Master's DVR+ ($349 with a 1TB internal hard drive; $249 if you want to provide your own external hard drive) can record broadcast channels with no subscription fees, but only for a single television. If you don’t need rich guide data or powerful scheduling features, you can also buy a no-frills tuner box like the MediaSonic Homeworx ($35, available at Amazon) and record channels to an external USB drive. (Look for a review roundup of these options in the near future.)

Where the Nvidia Shield excels is its high-quality recordings from the HDHomeRun tuner, granular recording options from Plex, and the ability to have a single box that serves up all your media. For more tech-savvy users, it’s worth jumping through some hoops to get there.

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